Reduction in Egg Fertility of Aedes albopictus Mosquitoes in Greece Following Releases of Imported Sterile Males.
Georgios BalatsosArianna PuggioliVasileios KarrasIoanna LytraGeorge MastronikolosMarco CarrieriDimitrios P PapachristosMarco MalfaciniAngeliki StefopoulouCharalampos S IoannouFabrizio BalestrinoJérémy BouyerDušan PetrićIgor PajovićApostolos KapranasNikolaos T PapadopoulosPanagiotis G MilonasRomeo BelliniΑntonios MichaelakisPublished in: Insects (2021)
Aedes albopictus, an invasive mosquito species, is currently well established in many European countries, posing high risks to human health. A preliminary trial using repetitive releases of irradiated sterile male mosquitoes was designed, implemented and evaluated for the first time in Greece. The main scope of this trial was to investigate the efficacy of sterile insect technique (SIT) on wild population egg hatch rate in Greece using mass-produced sterile male mosquitoes from another country (Italy). The study was conducted in Vravrona area, close to Athens International Airport (Attica Region). The number of eggs laid in ovitraps was similar in all intervention and control plots. However, a significant reduction in egg hatch rate was recorded in the SIT plot in comparison with both control plots starting two weeks after the first release. This trial validates the logistics (transportation, releases handling and monitoring) as a major step towards implementing efficient, environmentally safe control approaches as an additional tool against the invasive Aedes species in Greece and more widely in Europe.